ESRB Demands Hidden Content Review 70
Gamasutra is reporting that the ESRB is now mandating an audit of hidden game content. The audit is retroactive to the 1st of this month. From the article: "Fully disclosing hidden content accessible as Easter eggs and via cheat codes has always been part of ESRB's explicitly stated requirements when submitting games to be rated. In the July 20 public announcement, which focused on the revocation of a specific game's rating assignment, we formally stated that any pertinent content shipped on the game disc that may be relevant to a rating must be disclosed to ESRB, even if it is not intended to ever be accessed during game play."
How are they going to enforce this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:1, Redundant)
Now they believe that 8 year old Little Johnny is safe from pornography in the M rated games they buy him.
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:1)
As long as the ESRB precludes government regulation of the gaming industry it has done it's job and continues to be useful. If it allows through inaction or incompetence, increased government control and regulation _then_ it will out live it's usefulness. At which time the FCC will take over and continue to regulate the failures of private industry.
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:2)
They don't have to "enforce" it. It's in the content provider's best interest to provide this data. Otherwise, they might be the next Rockstar.
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:1)
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Rob
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:2, Insightful)
How much does it cost to get a game rated by ESRB?
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:4, Informative)
They can and will enforce it. Do you know why? Because the ESRB is comprised of the game publishers. This is the fact that people sometimes seem to forget. It is not an agency outside the industry. It is the industry, literally. The ESRB was created because the industry wanted to self-police and avoid government intervention; the alternative to the ESRB is not nothing, it's a government agency like the FCC overseeing video games. Which would you rather have to deal with?
The ESRB can and does routinely hand out fines to member companies. From what I remember from my time in the industry, fines start at $10,000 and go up from there. Most of these fines are not publicized because they're for procedural things like answering ESRB requests later than promised. There's no question of whether or not the fines will be paid; the fines will be paid or the publisher loses membership in the ESRB. No membership, no ratings; no ratings, no sales at stores like Wal-Mart, Gamestop or EB.
Regardless, this is nothing different than what the ESRB's stated policy has always been. They're just reiterating it because obviously a few publishers didn't quite get it. Publishers are required to submit the most prurient content for review. There's no qualifier saying "the most prurient playable content". Whether it's supposed to be playable or not doesn't matter. The ESRB has been saying this all along through the whole Hot Coffee thing; it's not as if they don't know about easter eggs or hidden content. It's not as if the publishers can pull a fast one on their own industry group. The rules have always been pretty clear.
I guess what I'm saying is sheesh people, everybody calm down. This is what you want to have happen; the industry policing itself, and enforcing its own rules. This is the way you keep people like Hillary Clinton from writing laws saying the ESRB is ineffective and therefore the government needs to step in and assume its role.
Re:How are they going to enforce this? (Score:1)
Sounds like a pretty effective way to keep independent developers out of the retail market.
New Cheat Code Scandal! (Score:5, Funny)
It has recently been revealed that young users of the Internet can unlock "hidden" pornographic content by using the following cheat code:
w w w . p e n t h o u s e . c o m
The ESRB has demanded a full recall of all software which works with the above code.
ESRB dupe (Score:5, Funny)
On July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff."
ESRB's been learning from Slashdot. Unfortunately, it's been from the editors, not the posters.
Re:ESRB dupe (Score:3, Funny)
What, would you prefer the ERSB to change its name to the GNAA?
Re:ESRB dupe (Score:3, Insightful)
On July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff."
ESRB's been learning from Slashdot. Unfortunately, it's been from the editors, not the posters.
Not really. It's more like:
"Prior to July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff that can be accessed."
"On July 20, we explicitly said you had to tell us about all hidden stuff. Period."
They're asking for trouble. (Score:5, Insightful)
I know that a LOT of games would get rated 18 here in Germany should they do such a reevaluation here (often blood effects and stuff get disabled in the german version to avoid a ban from advertising and they can be enabled again by flipping a few bits). Obviously that's not really a problem for the US, the only country specific "taming" I heard of was Giants: Citizen Kabuto, where that Sea Reaper girl is topless in the international version. But cutting of content to get a lower rating happens in the US, too (just that it'll be removed from all versions, not just the US one). EA seems to do it a lot. Wouldn't surprise me if that was done sloppily after the months of 20 hour days leading up to a release. After all, you might have attempted to load that stuff somewhere and instead of going bug hunting you just kill the trigger.
Re:They're asking for trouble. (Score:1)
The answer is very simple: all contributions to the product are audited and/or reviewed when they are submitted. This is how professional software development teams work. At my job, before I'm allowed to "check in" any changes, another developer must review thatm. Our versi
Re:They're asking for trouble. (Score:1)
Re:They're asking for trouble. (Score:3, Insightful)
I do not think you understand the problem. Here is an example of what the prblem is:
1. The developers put an edgy thing into their game (lets say blood from gunshots).
2. This game is now submitted to testers at the production end, who notice the blood.
3. The testers tell the production legal team about the blood.
4. The legal team decides that they want a "T" rating, so they tell the devolpers to take it out.
5. The developers, now in beta and nearing release date, decide to disable the blood (say,
Re:They're asking for trouble. (Score:1)
Farewell to quality? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Farewell to quality? (Score:1)
Re:Farewell to quality? (Score:1)
Re:Farewell to quality? (Score:1)
Does this mean that games that do the whole "under render thing" rendering the body and then rendering the clothes on it, are suddenly AO games?
Not necessarily. If games don't ever send the naughty bits' meshes to the video card, or they use a "caulk" texture [wikipedia.org] (solid transparency or solid black) when drawing body parts that aren't meant to be seen, then the ability to draw the body parts isn't shipped on the disc.
Re:Farewell to quality? (Score:1)
Games w/o ratings (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Games w/o ratings (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Games w/o ratings (Score:1)
Re:Games w/o ratings (Score:1)
Full Disclosure (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder what "fully" means? I mean, every cheat code possibility? Like this: If you change color register 1-32, 79, and 101-120 to the color of "flesh," characters will appear naked, but not anatomically naked. How about: if left player LP_YPOS is changed to 0 and right player RP_YPOS is changed to 132, colliding characters will have LP face aligned with RP crotch.
This is a logistical nightmare. Instead, the ESRB will have to accept blanket statements about possible cheat code types. Things like pallette changes, animation reassignment, physics changes, collision detection, hard-drive content hacking, and so on.
On the bright side, it sounds like companies will need to hire new testers. Not to mention be nice to the cheat-device manufacturers.
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:1)
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:1)
Having to raise the cost of games is the bright side? You must hate games.
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:2)
How the hell do you infer that from what he said?
Your conclusion makes no sense. Oh, I see. [datanation.com]
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:1)
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:2)
I see your point, but after struggling through bug after bug (and patch after patch) of for instance Neverwinter Nights, I think I'd prefer paying $5 or so more for decent QA, though.
I mean, they had something like twenty patches in the first few monts. It felt like a public beta more than a finished product.
The lack of QA makes me hate games
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:1)
I plead guilty, and throw myself on the mercy of the court.
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:4, Interesting)
The ESRB really wants very simple information:
1) are there hidden nudie pictures being shipped with the product
2) are there hidden sex animations being shipped with the product
Note that the GTA game causing this whole issue would have failed both of these.
Game companies shouldn't need to hire any new testers. Instead, this will all be taken care of contractually. The coders and artists will sign contracts promising under penalty of $$$ and firing not to include such content. The development house will promise under penalty of $$$ not to include such content to the publisher. The publisher will promise under penalty of $$$ and publicity nightmare to the ESRB that they have not included any undocumented content. When the shit hits the fan, the ESRB will say: the publisher lied to us, but now they have to pay up and fix things. The publisher will say they were hoodwinked by the dev house, will fine them, and maybe not publish any more games by them. The dev house will fine and fire the offending devs or artists, and promise to be good in the future.
Problem solved.
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:2)
>Problem solved.
I'm sure you mean Problem created.
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:1)
Re:Full Disclosure (Score:2)
If your game provides any one of these 3 things, and you don't tell the ESRB about it, you should be considered in violation of your ESRB rating contract, and face the full penalties it provides.
If, for reasons of ease, you wish to include non-player visible content in your game (and there are indeed many good reasons to do so), then you provide a viewer to the ESRB so that con
What game publishers don't want you to know... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What game publishers don't want you to know... (Score:2)
Re:What game publishers don't want you to know... (Score:1)
Its blatant and in-your-face pornography.
Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
"Fully disclosing hidden content accessible as Easter eggs and via cheat codes..."
Too bad the dry humping minigame in GTA:SA is not available via easter egg or cheat code. If you only have the console and the game, there is no way to access that content. I'm not saying it's acceptable to have the code left in the game to be easily unlocked (using alternative means), but I just find it funny that their "cracking down" on games doesn't include the sole game that started this whole controversy.
Re:Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
It's in the freakin' summary, man.
Re:Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
Re:Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
Anyway, it's kind of pointless makign this assertion now anyways. After all the crap Rockstar is going through a situation like this wouldnt happen again for a long long time. As an above poster mentioend it's just a publicity thing.
But then again, publicity or not it's important for the general population to feel like the ESRB is doign their job.
Re:Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
There are many other clues on the box that suggest this game is not suitable for kids, and then there's the "Strong Sexual Content" declaration
Re:Doesn't apply to GTA:SA (Score:1)
I really think the majority of the hub-bub that has gone on about GTA is politically motivated. GTA is obviously not packed with family values so any politician who goes up against it obviously is mister (or Mrs) Family Values.
Re:My name is SgtFagita, and I CAN'T READ!!! (Score:1)
ESRB trying to ban all modding? (Score:4, Interesting)
ESRB remains concerned about third party modifications that undermine the accuracy of the original rating, and we are exploring ways to maintain the credibility of the rating system with consumers in light of modifications of this nature.
Since the only way to prevent a mod from affecting the rating of a game is to ban modding altogether, it looks to me like the ESRB wants to prevent modding. They might do this by automatically rating any game that supports mods with an AO rating.
This would be a huge blow against mods, and let's face it, mods drive a large portion of the game industry. Would anybody still be playing Half-Life 1 were it not for a few of the more popular mods released for it? HLDM and HL2DM only get you so far before mods take over as the dominant multiplayer experience.
Re:ESRB trying to ban all modding? (Score:1)
Re:ESRB trying to ban all modding? (Score:1)
Re:ESRB trying to ban all modding? (Score:2)
Re:ESRB trying to ban all modding? (Score:2)
Yes, it would never be impossible to mod such a game, it would be too much trouble to bother.
ESRB should create a new notice, like for online (Score:1)
Why not put a new notice on every single game and splash screens.
"ESRB Notice: Game Experience May Change When Using Third-Party Patches and/or Cheat Devices".
This problem was already solved!
Hmm, (Score:1)
ESRB is a major part of the current problem. (Score:1)
Re:ESRB is a major part of the current problem. (Score:1)
Hypocrites! Their logos have hidden porn! (Score:1)
Repulsive hidden pornography unlocked! [telia.com]*
*The macro (mod/patch) merely rearranges and unlocks features ALREADY IN THE CONTENT supplied by ESRB.
I demand a complete withdrawal of all ESRB decals, and any future decals they design should not be possible to transform into pornography, violent scenes, pentagrams or curse words.
Where is the debate!? (Score:2)